Projection (alchemy)

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File:Alchemik Sedziwoj Matejko.JPG
Depiction of Sedziwój performing a transmutation for Sigismund III by Jan Matejko, 1867

Projection was the ultimate goal of Western alchemy. Once the philosopher's stone or powder of projection had been created, the process of projection would be used to transmute a lesser substance into a higher form; often lead into gold.

Typically, the process is described as casting a small portion of the Stone into a molten base metal.

Claims and demonstrations

The seventeenth century saw an increase in tales of physical transmutation and projection. These are variously explained as examples of charlatanism, fiction, pseudo-scientific error, or missed metaphor. The following is a typical account of the projection process described by Jan Baptista van Helmont in his De Natura Vitae Eternae.[1]

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Other reports include:

While it may not account for all claims of metallic transmutation, some alchemists of this time period give accounts of fraudulent projection demonstrations, distinguishing themselves from the projectors. Maier's Examen Fucorum Pseudo-chymicorum and Khunrath's Treuhertzige Warnungs-Vermahnung list tricks used by pseudo-alchemists. Accounts are given of double-bottomed crucibles used to conceal hidden gold during projection demonstrations.[3]

In art and entertainment

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The concept of projection appears in various fictional works related to alchemy. It's a notable theme in Ben Jonson's The Alchemist where the following dialogue can be found, commenting on fraudulent applications of projection:[4]

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References

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  • Charles John Samuel Thompson. Alchemy and Alchemists. Courier Dover Publications, 2002.
  • Tara E. Nummedal. Alchemy and authority in the Holy Roman Empire. University of Chicago Press, 2007.

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  1. Rosemary Guiley. The Encyclopedia of Magic and Alchemy. 2006. p.328
  2. Charles John Samuel Thompson. Alchemy and Alchemists. p.189
  3. Tara E. Nummedal. Alchemy and authority in the Holy Roman Empire. p.171
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